DYSPNOEA and Cozaar

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DYSPNOEA Symptoms and Causes

When you're short of breath, it's hard or uncomfortable for you to take in the oxygen your body needs. You may feel as if you're not getting enough air. Sometimes you can have mild breathing problems because of a stuffy nose or intense exercise. But shortness of breath can also be a sign of a serious disease.

Many conditions can make you feel short of breath:

Lung conditions such as asthma, emphysema, or pneumonia

Problems with your trachea or bronchi, which are part of your airway system

Heart disease can make you feel breathless if your heart cannot pump enough blood to supply oxygen to your body

Anxiety and panic attacks

Allergies

If you often have trouble breathing, it is important to find out the cause.

DYSPNOEA Clinical Trials and Studies

Treatments might be new drugs or new combinations of drugs, new surgical procedures or devices, or new ways to use existing treatments. The goal of clinical trials is to determine if a new test or treatment works and is safe. Clinical trials can also look at other aspects of care, such as improving the quality of life for people with chronic illnesses. People participate in clinical trials for a variety of reasons. Healthy volunteers say they participate to help others and to contribute to moving science forward. Participants with an illness or disease also participate to help others, but also to possibly receive the newest treatment and to have the additional care and attention from the clinical trial staff.

Feasibility and acceptability of a nurse practitioner-delivered dyspnea management intervention in patients with advanced lung cancer; Effect of a nurse practitioner-delivered dyspnea management intervention on breathlessness in patients with advanced lung cancer; Effect of a nurse practitioner-delivered dyspnea management intervention on quality of life in patients with advanced lung cancer; Effect of a nurse practitioner-delivered dyspnea management intervention on mood symptoms in patients with advanced lung cancer

To determine the physiological mechanisms of exertional dyspnea in patients with fibrotic ILD; To determine the mechanism by which hyperoxia improves exertional dyspnea and exercise time; To determine any physiological mechanistic differences of exertional dyspnea between participants with fibrotic ILD and healthy control participants.

To determine if dyspnea is qualitatively and quantitatively different in patients with cystic fibrosis compared with age and sex-matched healthy controls during exercise; To determine if the dyspnea responses can be explained by differences in the ventilatory response to exercise.

Assess the ability of the VRI to improve clinical outcomes via accurate, early classification of the cause of acute dyspnea as HF or other (i.e. COPD, PE etc).; Assess the agreement to aid in classifying the cause of acute dyspnea as HF or other of the VRI in comparison to BNP/NTproBNP assays.; Assess the ability of the VRI to aid in classifying the cause of acute dyspnea as HF or COPD; Evaluate the ability of the VRI to monitor changes in clinical status following treatment in comparison with other standard testing methods (e.g. ECG, serial chest x-rays, etc.)

Primary outcome measure is time in minutes for which breathlessness is improved after 5 minutes use of the fan directed at the face; Relief from breathlessness noted on relief score after using the handheld fan; Correlation between VAS and NRS scales

If you think you may have a medical emergency, call your doctor or 911 immediately.

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